Title: Half His Age
Author: Jenette McCurdy
Genre: Fiction/ Romance
Published: 2026
Description: Waldo is ravenous. Horny. Blunt. Naïve. Wise.
Impulsive. Angry. Forceful. Hurting. Perceptive/ Endlessly wanting. And the
thing she want most of all: Mr. Korgy, her creative writing teacher with the wife
and the kid and the mortgage and the bills, with the dead dreams and the atrophied
looks and the growing paunch. She doesn’t know why she wants him. It is a
passion? His life experience? The fact that he knows books and films and things
that she doesn’t? Or is it purer than that, rooted in their unlikely
connection, their kindred spirits, the similar filter with which they each take
in the world around them? Or, perhaps it’s just enough that he sees her when no
one else does.
Review: After the impressive “I’m Glad My Mom Died”, my expectations for Jenette McCurdy’s fiction debut were sky-high. Unfortunately, “Half His Age” is a massive disappointment that falls short in nearly every way. What works as a direct and honest voice in her memoir feels unpolished and repetitive here.
We meet Waldo, a 17-year-old girl who starts to show a special interest
in her creative writing teacher, Mr. Korgy, who is 40.
Waldo is meant to be a complex character struggling with trauma and a
shopping addiction. Instead she comes across mainly as insufferable and
one-dimensional. Her obsession with her teacher lacks emotional depth. Mr.
Korgy himself is a cliché and he is utterly uninteresting. Because you don’t
connect with either of them, their destructive relationship feels more like a
tedious repetition of tropes than a bold literary statement.
The book relies heavily on explicit, often vulgar scenes that push the
boundaries of discomfort. Although McCurdy indicates that this discomfort is
intentional, in practice it mostly feels like cheap shock value. There is one
scene especially (if you read it, you know which scene I mean) that was so
gross. The couple already gave me the ick, but that scene made it worse.
I love Jennette McCurdy, and I really wished I liked this book, but it
lacks humor, nuance and sincerity that made McCurdy such an interesting voice. “Half
His Age” is mainly a frustrating reading experience that I wouldn’t recommend
to anyone.
Rating: 1/ 5
Author: Jenette McCurdy
Review: After the impressive “I’m Glad My Mom Died”, my expectations for Jenette McCurdy’s fiction debut were sky-high. Unfortunately, “Half His Age” is a massive disappointment that falls short in nearly every way. What works as a direct and honest voice in her memoir feels unpolished and repetitive here.

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